Cancer extras

The Cancer Care Center

Chemotherapy

At St. Anthony’s Cancer Care Center, our medical oncologists work closely with the other members of your medical team to deliver compassionate care that is unique to each patient. Your treatment may include chemotherapy.

Chemotherapy, also called “medical oncology,” is the use of powerful drugs to kill cancer. Chemotherapy is a systemic (body-wide) treatment, because the medicine affects the entire body, not just the cancerous site.

You may receive chemotherapy during your treatment process to:

Cure the cancer. For some patients, chemotherapy is the only treatment necessary.

Support other cancer treatments. You may receive chemotherapy in order to shrink the tumor prior to surgery, or to destroy remaining cancer cells after surgery or radiation.

Minimize the cancer, so it does not metastasize (spread) to other parts of your body.

Relieve symptoms of cancer, called palliative chemotherapy. When the cancer is too advanced to be cured, chemotherapy may be used to help relieve some of the symptoms.

How is the chemotherapy given?

Chemotherapy is given in different ways, depending on each person and the kind of cancer. You may receive chemotherapy:

through an injection

intravenously (into your veins, through an IV)

by taking a pill

by receiving an injection into the fluid that surrounds your spinal cord or brain

St. Anthony's Cancer Care Center offers the most advanced and most effective chemotherapy treatments, including chemoembolization, a technique that pushes the chemotherapy drugs directly into the arteries to cut off the blood supply to the tumor. Without a blood supply, the tumor is destroyed.

Infusion Center

Chemotherapy is often given in cycles, which means that you have a cycle of therapy, followed by a few weeks off to recuperate, and then another treatment cycle. Usually, chemotherapy is given on an outpatient basis. Patients at St. Anthony’s Cancer Care Center come to our state-of-the-art Infusion Center, receive the treatment, and then go home when it is finished. You are encouraged to bring books or CDs to help pass the time during your treatment. Our dedicated chemotherapy nurses will walk you through the entire process and help make you as comfortable as possible.

Side effects of chemotherapy

Because chemotherapy is systemic, it harms the healthy cells in your body in addition to destroying the cancer cells. Side effects you may experience include:

higher risk of infection

tiring easily (fatigue)

excessive bleeding

nerve damage which may cause pain

dry mouth

mouth sores or swelling in mouth

lack of appetite and weight loss

upset stomach, vomiting and diarrhea

hair loss

Often, these side effects disappear completely with time.

The cancer nurses at St. Anthony’s Cancer Care Center also will help you manage the side effects you may experience. They will educate you prior to your treatment, and be with you every step of the way. Speak up if you are having any discomfort or pain so our nurses can attend to you right away.

Once you return home, you should call your physician if you experience any of these symptoms:

fever

pain

bleeding

persistent nausea

weakness

Learn more: Talk to your doctor or nurse about what to expect from chemotherapy treatment.

For information about St. Anthony's Cancer Care Center - St. Louis, please call 314-ANTHONY (268-4669) or 800-554-9550
or visit find a physician online.

Working as trusted partners, the physicians and employees of St. Anthony's Health System will deliver care distinguished by its demonstrated quality and personalized service. We will be visibly engaged in improving the health and well­ being of the communities we serve in South County and beyond. We will stand together, proud to set the standard for independent community health systems.